Civil Rights Movement TWEETS
So many events in the Civil Rights Movement – imagine if you were present at all of them! How would you communicate the basic information of each major event quickly and concisely? Well, if we could send some technology back in time, maybe you could “tweet” your way through the Movement.

In this activity, you will report about various events, people, and organizations using Twitter as a model. In case you don’t know, Twitter is a social networking site that allows people to keep up with each other by posting messages of “tweets” that are no more than 140 characters in length. Over the next few days, you will use Chapter 29 and ABC-CLIO to post “tweets” about the events, individuals, and ideas listed below. This will serve as your Civil Rights Era study guide! Cut and paste the material below into a new page on your Unit 8 Online Notebook, and tweet away. Make sure your tweets are comlpete and cover a great deal about the topic ... but are limited in size! Don't worry too much - 140 is just a ballpark figure.


EXAMPLE TWEET – Why was Brown v. Board important?
Tweet Plessey overturned by SC, separate is not equal, schools must desegregate “with all deliberate speed”, should lead 2 more – bye bye Jim Crow? Will be some opposition! (that’s 138 characters … and a pretty complete tweet!)



Section 1 – Origins of the Civil Rights Movement

What "changes" were making the efforts of African Americans more successful than ever?

TweetMore Americans saw racism as evil, war made African Americans determined, they gained important resources


What happened in Montgomery in 1955, and what were the results of this protest?

TweetRosa Parks arrested on bus didn't give up seat to white, church decided Negroes stay off buses Monday, MLK spoke to group, continued boycott


What happened in Little Rock in 1957, and what were the results of this event?

Tweet9 African Americans 2 enroll in white school, didn't let them pass, Eckford went, mob followed, white woman took her home, Faubus refused 2 integrate


What happened in Greensboro in 1960, and what were the results of this event?
Tweet
College students order coffee, waitress refuses 2 give, sat for 45 mins, more protestors, sit-ins spread, whites beat blacks, effective protest


Provide a tweet describing SNCC.
Tweet
Organization for young people, increased pressure for change




Section 2 – Kennedy, Johnson, and Civil Rights


What happened on the Freedom Rides?

Tweet – CORE to desegragate interstate buses, didn't give up even w/ attacks, gov. orders 2 integrate interstate buses


What was the story and impact of the Birmingham Protests in 1963?
Tweet
African Americans wanted integration & better work, whites violent, firehosed people hard, finally leaders desegregate, many black children arrested


Describe the March on Washington, including the impact.
Tweet250,000 people march in DC, march ends in Lincoln Memorial, MLK gives "I Have a Dream" speech, Kennedy supports


What was the deal with the Civil Rights Act of 1964?

TweetBanned segregation in public places, no job discrimination, segregation illegal


What was Freedom Summer?

TweetSNCC makes drive for votes for blacks


Tweet about the Voting Rights Act of 1965

TweetBanned laws that prohibited blacks from voting


Provide a tweet describing the Selma to Montgomery March in 1965.

TweetMarchers attacked by state troopers, violence broadcasted on TV all over country


Describe what President Johnson did as a result of the Selma march.

Tweet
Johnson sent troops 2 protect marchers, also pushed action on voting rights, pushed a bill of voting rights


Tweet about Johnson’s Great Society – how will it help the Movement?

Tweet – Provides 4 poor, old, women, more education, end discrimination, protect environment. Will equalize 4 African Americans, no racial injustice


Tweet about the impact of the movement in the North, especially Chicago, in the later 1960s.
Tweet
African Americans mad they had no power, 164 riots, MLK killed, blacks very angry, SNCC "black power"



How is the Movement dividing in the later years of the 60s?

TweetCivil right leaders don't know what to do next, different opinions